Sunday, January 29, 2017

Final hearing for the Church to begin early next month

The final hearing of the
Church at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child
Sexual Abuse begins on February 6 and will run for three weeks, writes
Francis Sullivan, CEO of the Truth, Justice and Healing Council.

Unlike the case studies, this hearing will be less forensic in nature
and more of an exploration of the causes and contributing factors for
the institutional responses from Church authorities to child sex abuse
cases.

This is an important hearing and is vital to the overall assessment
the Commission will make of the Church’s response to this scandal.

Last year I mentioned that we all need to be mindful of the "time
warp" that can trap our thinking about the incidence of and response to
child abuse. The history of abuse in the Catholic Church has been
confronting and shameful. There is no excuse for it. There may well be
reasons why it occurred but the fact that it did cannot be merely
contextualised away.

The Royal Commission, during private sessions and through data
collection, has an estimate of the extent of the sexual abuse of
children within the Church. I am sure this will be made public in the
hearing and I for one am bracing myself for this revelation.

This will be the first time anywhere in the world that the data of
the Catholic Church on child sexual abuse has been compiled and analysed
for public consideration. The data and the evidence from expert
witnesses will make for an intense examination of the abuse scandal.

It will point to cultural and sociological issues in the Catholic
Church in Australia — how decision making occurred, who was involved and
why. It will look at where responsibility fell and to what degree
accountability and compliance processes were effectively deployed.

The
hearing will seek to provide an understanding of how priests and
religious were selected and trained in decades past as well as in
current times.